While working on the International Space Station (ISS) astronauts are promised incredible views, but when it comes to living quarters astronauts shouldn’t expect anything as grand. Scott Kelly, current ISS expedition commander, offers a tour of his personal quarters aboard the space station through a video uploaded to YouTube. As most people will notice right away, his living area is really nothing more than a closet.

As you would expect, space aboard the ISS is a premium so astronauts don’t get a lot. Luckily, thanks to a lack of gravity, they don’t need a lot either. In space, a bed doesn’t need to lay on the ground. Thanks to micro gravity an astronaut’s bed is little more than a sleeping bag with arm restraints that’s hung on the wall.

As Commander Kelly points out, one area that is lacking is space for clothing. He states that six months worth of clothes has to fit into the equivalent size of a large suitcase . That means you may have to wear underwear for more than just one day, but Kelly states clothes don’t get as dirty while aboard the ISS as they would on Earth. Speaking of being dirty, your room is also where you take sponge baths since there are no showers aboard the space station. Talk about roughing it.

The room does have some nice electronics though. Two computers are provided to the astronaut. One gives them access to ISS systems including their email and schedule while another connects them to the Internet, though connections are slow and spotty at times. Another nice feature is a Skype-like phone which allows the astronaut to make calls when the space station’s satellite dish is properly aligned.

While a room at the cheapest Holiday Inn would look like a suite to astronauts aboard the ISS any good real estate agent will tell you that it’s not the size of the room that’s important it’s “location, location, location.”